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Clark, Burton R. 1995. Places of Inquiry Research and Advanced Education in Modern Universities. 19-55 PDF
Clark, Burton R. 1995. Places of Inquiry Research and Advanced Education in Modern Universities. 19-55 PDF
Copyright © 1995. University of California Press. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any
form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable
Chapter One—
The Federal Republic of Germany:
Vicissitudes of the Humboldtian Project
It all began in early nineteenthcentury Germany, for it was there that ideology and interest first came together powerfully and in a sustainable fashion to turn research
into a university phenomenon. It was there that the principle of a unity of research and teaching (Einheit von Forschung und Lehre) was first established. In its pure
Humboldtian form, the Germanic conception insisted that university teachers become investigators who use the findings of recent research in their teaching. Their
students, whether future doctors, teachers, civil servants, or academicians, should also engage in research activity. Together, teacher and student would pursue the
truth. Humboldt offered an original and striking formulation.
One unique feature of higher intellectual institutions is that they conceive of science and scholarship as dealing with ultimately inexhaustible tasks: this means that they are
engaged in an unceasing process of inquiry. The lower levels of education present closed and settled bodies of knowledge. The relation between teacher and pupil at the higher
level is a different one from what it was at the lower levels. At the higher level, the teacher does not exist for the sake of the student; both teacher and student have their
justification in the common pursuit of knowledge. 1
Here was the formulation for all time that put the creation of new knowledge as well as the revision of old ideas first among the tasks of higher education. "An
unceasing process of inquiry" was placed in the driver's seat. Seekers one and all, teachers and students were simply coresearchers.
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Like much German idealism, this early nineteenthcentury formulation was quite fanciful. The general attitude and larger plan of which it was a part, suffused with high
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blown rhetoric, offered comforting but confusing ambiguity. Contradictory actions could claim its parentage, and within a few decades actual practices would stray far
afield from what such ideological founding fathers as Johann Fichte, Friedrich von Schelling, and Friedrich Schleiermacher, as well as Humboldt, had in mind. But the
broad principle that stressed the primacy of inquiry provided an ideological umbrella under which German universities increasingly became premier educational centers.
From the second decade of the nineteenth century onward, a new breed of academic effectively learned in these universities how to put research foundations under the
house of teaching and learning. And for over fifty years the secrets of this new framework were virtually a German monopoly. "Until about the 1870s, the German
universities were virtually the only institutions in the world in which a student could obtain training in how to do scientific or scholarly research." 2 Up to the turn of the
present century and beyond, some alert English scholars crossed the channel, a much larger number of Americans made the long and difficult transatlantic voyage, and
a goodly number of Japanese wouldbe academic researchers came all the way from Tokyo and Kyoto to pursue the means of working at the frontiers of knowledge
and, on returning home, to attempt to graft research components onto their own system of higher education. Mighty were the German chairholding professors in the
last half of the nineteenth century and well into the twentieth. They stood at the pinnacle of German culture and were recognized internationally as the leaders in a new
world of researchbased higher education. Their universities in Berlin, Heidelberg, Tübingen, Munich, and other German cities were the first true "research
universities," a designation that would dominate internationally in the second half of the present century. Here the academic commitment to research was not only born
but developed into a major institutional form. A different dynamic had been turned loose.
Thus what the German academic system became in the nineteenth century is doubly important for understanding connections among research, teaching, and study. A
genetic imprint was established for the system itself, one that would strongly persist in the twentieth century; and the German system became a longsustained exemplar
internationally of how to turn research into a foundation for advanced teaching and study. Certain operational tools were fashioned which have had
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lasting import in Germany and elsewhere, organizational devices that served well under certain conditions. In the twentieth century, however, radically altered settings
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have put enormous pressure on a deeply entrenched framework to adapt and change. The old ways have not only been increasingly challenged at home, particularly in
the post1960 decades, but they have been outdistanced by the new tools and procedures of another nation, the United States, which, although initiated in the late
nineteenth century, blossomed after World War II. Nevertheless, nineteenthcentury Germany is where historical and structural explanation begins.
Institutional Definition of the Humboldtian Attitude
A principle is one thing and practice quite another. Multisided from the outset and hardly a clear set of directives, Humboldtian doctrine contained ideas that lent
themselves to various interpretations and pursuits. Going off in one direction were sentiments that helped to turn loose the research imperative in whatever form it might
evolve. Inquiry for its own sake was foremost. Related to it was the strong assertion of Lehrfreiheit and Lernfreiheit, concepts of freedom of teaching and freedom
of learning that have persisted in Germany to the present day. For a fruitful common engagement in the pursuit of truth, professors and students needed to be free not
only from state supervision but also from the constraint of mundane requirements that then as now would normally dot the curriculum and narrow the pathways of
academic life. The "curriculum" would be whatever professors chose to do in their own inquiries and whatever research topics the students pursued. Directly based on
current research, the teaching "program" would be the opposite of the fixed classical curriculum. Students were similarly liberated, free to choose universities and
subjects to the point of wandering among them, even free not to study for long periods of time. As Lehrfreiheit and Lehnfreiheit became Holy Writ, professorial
options and student choices were widened even further than what took place in American higher education in the last decades of the nineteenth century under the sway
of the elective principle. Decades earlier in Germany, extreme freedom was seen to go handinhand with the unceasing process of inquiry. The first would maximize
the second; both would serve the production of knowledge.
At the same time, the original doctrine of Humboldtianism located
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this new emphasis on unlimited and unfettered inquiry within a broad humanistic concern: the research commitment should enlighten and help create a rationally
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organized society. Education through inquiry would lead to informed, rounded personalities who would lift German culture to new heights. Wissenschaft, knowledge,
which entails "the unfolding of mind as it comes to understand itself through study and learning," was seen as closely connected to Bildung, selfformulation or self
realization, "centering on the individual's efforts to achieve intellectual or spiritual perfection." 3 The humanistic side of the Humboldtian ideology could not have been
stronger: the search for truth, the ''unceasing process of inquiry," should combine with ambition to bring about a correct life.
Margareta Bertilsson has aptly characterized the Humboldtian ideal of the university as "extravagant," pointing to not one but four imperatives: it would not only unite
research and teaching but would also "unite through philosophy the various empirical sciences," and "unite science and general upbringing," and "unite science with
universal enlightenment."4 Thus understood, rather than serve as an apologia and a directive for highly specialized research, the Berlin doctrine of 1810 in all its fullness
was actually a variant of what is now called liberal education. The new form of university was even warned to be on guard against the tendency already afoot in the
natural sciences toward "excessively" empirical or utilitarian research. This type of activity should be placed "under the safe control of appropriate disciplines within the
philosophy faculty such as "natural philosophy,' or shunted aside in one of the professional faculties, notably medicine, or placed in separate technical universities."5
But it was not long before the changing realities of early nineteenthcentury academic life caught up with and pushed aside many of the tenets in this fanciful package of
ideas. Although, as put by William Muir, "the University of Berlin opened in October, 1810, with a faculty handpicked by Humboldt . . . it did not stick for long to the
course he had plotted for it."6 For one, most students were still found in professional pursuits.
In point of fact, the great majority of students did not proceed toward degrees or even enroll in the seminars that taught the research procedures necessary to carry out advanced
investigation. Rather, they registered in the lecture courses that prepared them for the professional examinations in which they were interested. Even the philosophy faculty
became largely
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quasiprofessional, as it provided the instruction leading to the qualification required for teaching in the Gymnasia, the reformed secondary schools that Humboldt had created. 7
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Whether in Berlin or elsewhere in Germany, the university was still largely a place for utilitarian instruction. Additionally, those students who lived in "student
corporations," immersed in the social forms of aristocratic Junkerdom, could avoid all contact with the ideal life that the Humboldtian doctrine portrayed. Otto von
Bismarck (18151898), later the first chancellor of the German Empire (18711890), was one such student. His student experience at Göttingen, reported in his
Reflections and Reminiscences, "may be taken as symptomatic of the cavalier lifestyle: much drinking and dueling interrupted by only superficial attention to studies,
usually in law."8 The enormous space for student choice created by Lernfreiheit, freedom of study, played into the hands of those students from Junker families who
came to the university for its social life—"the mindless selfindulgences of the saberwielding fraternity students"9 —and passed final examinations after a few weeks or
months of cramming. Utilitarian and social interests took the majority of students away from the pursuit of inquiry.
Most important, the interests of professors in the broadly constructed philosophy faculty from the early nineteenth century onward were shaped by that emerging
vehicle of modern science, the academic discipline, "a particular field of knowledge differentiated from the rest by the research questions it asked and the technical
skills that had to be learned to answer these questions."10 Disciplinary specialization gradually developed its own dynamics: as focused research produced new
findings, it created a larger and deeper body of specific cognitive material that had to be taught and learned; from that expanded and more esoteric base, professors
and students pushed on in successive waves with ever more pointed inquiries that produced still more specialized knowledge. Such disciplinary selfamplification was
encouraged and given room to operate by the first part of the Humboldtian doctrine, that of unity of research and teaching, essentially "education through science." The
other unities identified by Bertilsson were soon ignored by hosts of German academics; new generations of natural scientists "plunged with a vengeance into nutsand
bolts laboratory work and sneered at attempts at speculative or integrative theorizing."11 Wrapped around the research imperative, new academic inter
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ests, not the ideals of Humboldt, became the engine driving nineteenthcentury German science and scholarship.
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The Operational Tools
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Those interests were to find lasting embodiment and ongoing support in two gradually emerging institutional forms: the teachingresearch laboratory and the teaching
research seminar. The classic case and enormously influential model of what Humboldtian doctrine was to mean in actual practice was the laboratory organized and
directed by a chemist, Justus Liebig, in the small provincial university of Giessen beginning in 1826 and lasting for three decades. Detailed analyses by historians of
science have shown that the orientations and practices of this "first 'largescale' modern teachingresearch laboratory" were not deduced from broad ideals and firmly
conceived plans but rather emerged as practical solutions to material conditions and emergent interests. According to Frederic L. Holmes, it is implausible that Liebig
could even have envisioned during the 1820s the kind of institution he would be heading in 1840; the mature form of the institute was largely the "unplanned outcome
of a series of small innovative moves." 12
This classic laboratory began and continued to operate in a very pragmatic manner. It started out as a training school for pharmacists similar to others of its type; over
its lifetime under the direction of Liebig, most of its graduates, in the words of Holmes, became "physicians or pharmacists, industrialists or farmers." Indeed, "those
prominent chemists of the later nineteenth century who are commonly identified with Liebig's school [in mentorapprentice chains] make up only a small minority of the
more than seven hundred persons who spent time in the laboratory at Giessen during the twentyeight years in which Liebig presided over its operation."13 Whatever
their reasons for attending the institute, it attracted from the beginning growing numbers of applicants. With a snowballing reputation, the laboratory had within fifteen
years of its opening, by the 1840s, over fifty students at a time and had become internationally famous as a school of chemistry, not the first of its kind but by far the
most imposing. "Its dramatic success prompted other German universities to evaluate the training methods established at Giessen."14
What the Giessen laboratory did was to contribute new knowledge while teaching existing knowledge and to do so in a way that gave the director and the institution a
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competitive advantage over old and new
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rivals at other universities. But the obstacles were numerous, especially during the first decade of existence. Instead of moving into a new building promised at the
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outset, the laboratory opened in "existing empty barracks." More critical, when Liebig and two associates petitioned the University Senate to establish their
"chemicopharmaceutical" institute within the university, they were voted down, on Humboldtian grounds. This rebuff "was a manifestation of the conflict that surfaced
repeatedly in Germanspeaking universities in this period between the ideal of a general education to cultivate the mind (Bildung) and the goal of training specific skills."
Whereas the proper role of the university was seen by the senate, within the purview of Bildung, to educate future civil servants, the proposed institute seemed to fall
too much in the direction of training "apothecaries, soap makers, brewers, and other craftsmen.'' With Humboldtian doctrine more hindrance than help, the new
institute had to be established, with the support of a provincial ministry, as a "private activity." 15 This young, aspiring professor of chemistry could control a teaching
program, but his research was institutionally marginal, deemed to be outside the boundaries of a properly constituted Humboldtian university.
Year by year Liebig drew not on Humboldt but improvised from immediate experience. He learned to concentrate lectures in a summer semester, then to devote the
entire winter semester to practical work in the new laboratory. As his research interests deepened and he was able to express them in setting research problems for
students, the balance of students, which at the outset had been almost 90 percent in favor of pharmacy, shifted toward chemistry matriculants. He invented simpler and
more reliable instruments for chemical analysis, making it possible for students of varying levels of insight and skill to routinely produce elementary analyses at a much
accelerated rate. As Liebig progressed and the laboratory prospered, student investigations became standard, first centering on problems the director set around his
own interests and capabilities and then going beyond them. With more than a critical mass of chemistry students in place in the laboratory in the 1840s, competitive
advantage was now fully at hand: as weighed by Holmes, "Liebig's command of so large a group of advanced students to whom he could give experimental projects
useful both to their training and to his interests enabled him to exploit new research openings with a swiftness that made it hard for chemists operating alone, or with
only a few students, to compete with him."16
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By midcentury, despite what Humboldt and the idealists of his day
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might have wished, the teachingresearch laboratory, crammed full of empirical and even utilitarian research—and not at all united with the other sciences by
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embracing philosophy—had arrived as a fundamental part of the organizational structure that would nurture the sciences in the remaining decades of the nineteenth
century and all of the twentieth. In this central piece of the mosaic that was the modern university in Germany, and later elsewhere, education through inquiry and
freedom of teaching and research became linked, not to broad humanistic education and general enlightenment, but to everincreasing specialization. Most important,
in the transformation of science from "a pastime of leisured and wealthy individuals into a regular vocational pursuit" that took place in Europe during the nineteenth
century, with Germany at the cutting edge, the university laboratory played a significant role. It became the organizational tool of the professorscientist; within it,
training procedures were developed and effected; there, specialist qualifications were established which certified scientific competence. As J. B. Morrell has pointed
out, particularly in the hands of such German chemists "as Liebig at Giessen, Bunsen at Heidelberg, Kolbe at Leipzig, and Baeyer at Munich, the university laboratory
provided for science an equivalent of the Renaissance artist's studio, in that it offered to apprentices induction into the scientific guild through pupilage in practical skills
under a masterpractitioner." The Germanmodeled university laboratory became "the place where students who had acquired the grammar of science from lectures
learned its language from practical experience.'' 17
A similar operating tool took the form of the seminar that incorporated professorial research interests and introduced students to the practice of research. The
researchoriented seminar became another institution for discovering, nurturing, and training scientific talent, another setting where the education of apprentices would
convey and push forward new approaches in a discipline.18 As Kathryn M. Olesko has stressed, seminars had been in existence for about two centuries before those
that concentrated on research methods appeared in German universities in the nineteenth century. In their older form, the seminars were mainly small settings for
training preachers and secondary school teachers. They had evolved from informal meetings of professors and students, replacing "the monologues of lecture courses
with dialogues between professors and students" and thereby "helping to transform the nature of teaching and of learning." Then, at a time when such
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modern disciplines as physics were emerging and professors were turning to research, some seminars began to concentrate on research methods. They now assumed,
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"in addition to their professional functions, a scholarly one: vigorous instruction in the academic disciplines." 19
A pivotal mathematicsphysics seminar established in Königsberg in 1834 by Franz Neumann and directed by him for over four decades, until 1876, influenced later
ventures. Before Königsberg, physics instruction was largely based on lecture courses and textbooks; selfinstruction was not uncommon. Now such instruction was
to include practical exercises in techniques of quantification, group review of problems, and innovative design of instruments. Again, as in the Giessen laboratory, trial
and error determined outcomes. The director "had not anticipated that the route to original investigations by students would be through assigned homework problems
and routine measuring exercises executed in common," as they made their weekly round from roundtable discussion led by the professor to homework on problems he
assigned and then to regroup in the professor's "teaching laboratory, an extension of his seminar located in his home," where they conducted measuring exercises,
"sometimes with instruments of their own design," and then to move the following week back to the roundtable.20 Meanwhile, the professor did not always practice
what he preached. Publicly ''he upheld idealistic notions of Wissenschaft and especially of Bildung" in which university instruction "shaped character and drew out
natural talents," but in practice he was developing a program focused on "discipline"—"training the mind to follow certain rules of investigative protocol and rigorous
techniques of investigation." The mental and material tools involved in the labor of science were primary in the Königsberg seminar. Neumann was promoting "a
distinctive set of investigative techniques."21
The Liebig laboratory and the Neumann seminar, classic cases and influential models in the development of German science, highlight the robust local organization of
the nineteenthcentury German university system. Such laboratories and seminars spread across the German system as strong basic units for effecting a teaching
research relationship. Students were pulled into these units both as research trainees and as research performers. Strikingly, the laboratory and the seminar gave
students an intimate involvement that did not and still does not obtain in the lecture hall, or in any classroom no matter how small, where the professor presents codified
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knowledge and students are expected to ab
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sorb the best of the past. Now, teaching was blended with research activity, study was folded into a research framework. The "unceasing process of inquiry" had
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found its operational tools.
The strength of newly fashioned laboratories and seminars in this pathbreaking setting did not derive solely from their role as fundamental units of membership. They
also became funding units; as such, they dealt directly with governmental ministries and were thereby positioned to largely ignore the alluniversity and faculty levels of
organization. The seminars and institutes, as put by Charles E. McClelland, "tended to become Staatsanstalten [public establishments] in themselves, legally and
financially responsible to the state, usually directly so, with the traditional corporate structure of the faculties and other university organs being bypassed." 22 As a
result, weak university organization developed as a generic feature: neither a strong university administration nor even a strong "faculty" or ''department" structure
emerged. These features would later become structural weaknesses, first to a mild degree in the early twentieth century and then in a major way when later expansion
into mass higher education resulted in greatly enlarged universities. But strong alluniversity organization was not necessary in universities where students commonly
numbered in the hundreds or less than two thousand: in the defining four decades of 18301870, total annual enrollment for about twenty universities did not exceed
16,000, a sum that reflected an agegroup participation rate of about onehalf of 1 percent.23 Not needing to be places of cohesive administration, the German
universities could operate with only nominal integration, in comparison to developing patterns in Britain and preeminently in the United States in the late decades of the
century. The German research university offered an essentially guild form of organization in which chairholding professors, utilizing institutes and seminars to effect an
integration of research, teaching, and study, were sufficient unto themselves. Together with the minister of education, they would take care of governance.
Thus it was not the university in general or even the major constituent faculties that guided action and drove the German system forward. It was the chaircontrolled
and chairsupervised institutes, seminars, laboratories, and even hospitals—"comparatively small and highly autonomous selfcontained units of academic production,"
in Wolfgang J. Mommsen's terms—on which rested, at the operational level, the success of the German university system.24 Offering many advantages for professors
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and students alike and operating as a sort of univer
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sity within the university, these operational forms gave the German higher education system "much of its world renown in the late nineteenth century." 25 Their modeling
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effect internationally was enormous, since it was in these small researchdedicated communities that thousands of visiting scholars participated. The lesson taken home
was that small, highly autonomous and selfcontained research groups gave specific meaning to doctrines of freedom in research, teaching, and study.
Again, it is helpful to note that the changes occurring in the first half and the middle of the nineteenth century were part of a longerterm flow that had begun during the
previous century. The reading of canonical texts had then been replaced in part by systematic lectures, a more fluid form that accommodated new material. To
accompany the lectures, following Olesko's analysis, "exercise sessions, private academic societies, reading clubs, and other small meetings of students with professors
appeared as forums," a smallgroup form "designed for learning through practical application what had been conveyed theoretically in lectures" which thereby "helped
shape and further define disciplinary knowledge by highlighting important methods and central topics.'' "Instigated from below, by professors and students, and not
from above, by the state," these informal and quasiformal forums, predating the broad structural reforms of the early nineteenth century, were a forerunner of
seminars. Their weakness was organizational instability. In contrast, seminars and institutes offered firmer standing, a way of "gaining official state approval and
financial support, and hence the means to an operational stability that would transcend staffing changes."26
Thus teaching and learning by means of canonical texts slowly evolved first into lectures that could change in content; then into forums, small meetings of students with
professors, that were more open to critical discussion and student initiative; and then into seminars, laboratories, and institutes, often private at the outset but later
regularized as statesupported university units, in which inquiry was gradually brought forward as both a mode of teaching and a mode of learning. The longterm
evolution adds further weight to the argument that operational unities of research, teaching, and study in nineteenthcentury German universities were not deduced from
broad ideologies of Bildung and Wissenschaft, nor were they direct creatures of gross structural reforms. Rather, they were worked out at the operating level as
academics sought ways to bring research and critical scholarship into the university setting, there to meld with pedagogy and training. New
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grand ideologies and macroreforms arguably helped to open up intellectual and organizational space: they established what in Part Two we call enabling conditions.
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But it was the evolution in operating units, born of changing interests of professors and students, that established the more immediate enacting conditions. There was
much that was bottomup.
System Conditions
Looming large among favoring conditions at the more macrolevels of system and university in the German setting was a political structure that encouraged academic
competition and the proliferation of research institutions. In sharp contrast to the Napoleonic unified national state characteristic of nineteenthcentury France (see
chap. 3), German government of the time was exceedingly fragmented. Before unification under Bismarck in 1870, German territories were ruled by nearly forty
sovereign states; after unification, the new Reich still consisted of over twenty principalities, kingdoms, duchies, and free cities. Under the new national constitution,
these various polities retained control over educational, cultural, and religious matters, thereby ensuring that throughout the rest of the nineteenth century formal
government control would remain radically decentralized. This structure had an enormous effect in promoting competition in the developing academic system. As the
perceived capability and the reputation of universities became based on the research prowess of professors, their laboratories and their seminars, state education
ministers sought to entice to their own states and universities, in one discipline after another, the established and rising talent in this new business of inquiry. A multistate
or "federal" framework thereby helped to create an academic labor market in which researchoriented scholars could move from one university to another according
to comparative attractiveness; preeminent was the chance to occupy a chair and direct an institute or seminar. Mobility was also not particularly hindered by position in
a civil service, since the German academics were not part of a single official framework as found elsewhere in European unitary states. In the fragmented German
setting, it was possible for a minor university such as Giessen to become the place in an emerging discipline within the system and indeed then to become a magnet for
talent internationally. Competition among states and universities became a primary condition of system development. 27
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McClelland has expressed well the emerging dynamics of this type of
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institutional field. As "the expanding private and statefinanced seminars produced larger and larger numbers of dedicated scholars imbued with the scientific values
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and methods of men who virtually founded their disciplines on a critical basis," the research ethic "received an institutional value: its product—notable scholarship—
came to be the major national criterion for appointments in the ceaseless struggle between ministries and faculties." 28 What had been "more the offspring of individual
faculty members than of state planning" now acquired state and institutional motives. By the last decades of the century, states could be found developing seminars and
institutes at "a feverish pace." In Prussia between 1882 and 1907, where nine universities were located, a noted (and much disliked) higher education minister,
Friedrich Althoff, helped establish no fewer than seventyseven institutes and seminars in the philosophical faculties, eightysix medical laboratories and clinics, nine
seminars in law, and four seminars in theology. Althoff was a classic case of the strong minister who wanted to directly fashion the base units of universities and
proceeded to intervene. But in turn the academics whom he wanted had considerable leverage: among outstanding candidates who could bring the coin of notable
scholarship, hardly one came "without demanding an institute—or without receiving it, immediately or shortly thereafter.'' And unspoken collusion of minister and
academic was only a step away, since Althoff "could then turn to the state financial authorities with the argument that to refuse funds for an institute would lead to filling
the vacancies with secondrate talent."29 Especially as spurred by state comparison and competition, the setting developed a logic readily recognizable in twentieth
century ministries and statefunded universities, in Germany and elsewhere, as bureau chiefs and related sector personnel attempt to maximize the resources of their
common domain against the counterconstraints of finance officials responsible for cost containment and an integrated state budget.
The dynamism of nineteenthcentury German academic science was thus given a major boost by growing governmental interest in "notable scholarship," leading to
expansion based on growth in knowledge before the states began to react to enlarged consumer demand. Particularly in the larger state governments, political
reorganization in the early nineteenth century had given the universities some economic security: state bureaucratic fiscal administration, often later cursed, was a big
improvement over "the inefficient, semifeudal, corporate management" of the eighteenth century. With Prussia taking the lead, the vari
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ous state governments then increasingly committed themselves to direct support of seminars and institutes. Despite the fact that student numbers increased very little up
form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable
to 1870, the states dramatically increased their funding of research. At Berlin University, in the halfcentury between 1820 and 1870, while the overall budget tripled
and academic salaries grew by less than double, the support of seminars and institutes increased 1,000 percent. In 1826, Berlin "spent over six times as much on
faculty salaries as on institutes and seminars; by 1870, the amount spent on the latter actually exceeded the total budget for professorial salaries." Other universities
showed a similar pattern of change. And state governments saw to it that the funds were earmarked for specific institutes and seminars, thereby avoiding the corporate
control of the university at large, within which traditional professors, suspicious of innovation, could exercise a conservative hand. The direct line between institute
director and education minister, described earlier, served both parties, establishing along the way "the quasiindependent status of the major research organizations
within the university" as a major and lasting peculiarity of German universities. 30 The instituteminister link became a carrying vehicle for promoting a researchbased
university framework.
After 1870, enlarged "consumer demand" then entered the picture as an important basis for state interest and university growth. While enrollment for all the universities
had fluctuated only in the range of about 12,000 to 13,000 between the 1830s and the 1860s, it grew to 34,000 by 1900 and 61,000 by 1914; the number of
students had not even kept pace during the earlier period with the growth of the general population, but the student rate of growth between 1870 and the turn of the
century was twice as fast.31 In this latter period, some universities doubled in size, and some increased four to eightfold. Heavy increases occurred in the
philosophical faculties containing the basic disciplines, as well as in the other two major faculties, law and medicine. Multiple interacting reasons for such growth were
not far to seek, together establishing a pattern that was to become commonplace and enlarged in twentiethcentury growth: more families were financially able to
support university study; more career opportunities were opening for university graduates; the secondary school system produced more students qualified to attend the
university, in the German case predominantly from the Gymnasien but also now from two "less noble" types of high schools, the Realgymnasien and
Oberrealschulen; foreign students increased to nearly 9 percent of total enrollment by the early twentieth
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century, and women increased by 1914 to about 7 percent. By the standards of the midnineteenth century, the university of 19001914 had been transformed into a
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"heterogeneous mass." 32
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Here were the seeds in the German system of what would become known in the second half of the twentieth century as the shift from elite to mass higher education.33
Along with this early increase in numbers and types of students came indications, written large at the time in the minds of many participants but appearing small in the
hindsight of later perspective, of generic problems for university research and research training. One problem was a rise in the student/teacher ratio, from an earlier 9:1
(18401870) to 11:1 (1880), 12:1 (1890), and 14:1 (1905). Higher ratios spelled increased teaching and compressed research time. A second disquieting
circumstance was more expansion in junior academic positions than among the full professorships: the number of students per major professor (Ordinarien) doubled
between 1870 and 1905 from seventeen to thirtyfour; two subordinate categories, Extraordinarien and Dozenten, the latter essentially "unsalaried academic
freelancers licensed to teach by the regular university staff," were, by 1910, giving the majority of all lecture courses. At Berlin, by 1900, "the irregular teaching staff
was doing the majority of the teaching." Or, more accurately, they were posted as teaching more than half the courses. Nonsalaried and completely noncivil service,
they may or may not have taught their listed courses: "even if lectures were announced, there is no way of knowing if they were given; the announcement was enough
to retain PD [Privatdozent] status."34 "Freedom of teaching" created abundant space for instructors as well as for professors to teach or not to teach, just as freedom
of study in effect supported the right of students not to study. In any event, in an early form of strains induced by growth, ''bigness had begun to cut a trench between
student and professor."35 The senior professors could not accommodate the "overflow" of students if they were to give primacy to research and research training,
tasks they had set aside in the small worlds of the institutes and the seminars to which only some of the students would be called. Lectures offered the setting to which
all students had access.
With rapid industrialization under way after 1870, German industry also increasingly entered the picture as its leaders developed an appetite, particularly in chemistry,
for the results of research and for welltrained scientific specialists. New major chemical firms both invested heavily in laboratories of their own and "provided limited
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financial and material
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support to selected university laboratories to encourage basic research of interest to them." 36 After unification the new national government itself also looked to
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universities for assistance in nation and empire building, including the applied science and technology that would help arm a powerful military establishment. State
officials at national and Land (individual state) levels saw to it that by the end of the 1880s "various technical schools had been consolidated into nine Technische
Hochschulen [technical universities or institutes of technology] and given the same administrative structure as the twentyone universities."37 Within a decade (in
1899), over the objection of the traditional universities, this alternative sector was given the right to award a general Doctor of Engineering degree. Impatient with
restrictive attitudes and practices in the universities, officials were also increasingly prone to develop, in an ad hoc fashion, governmentsupported research centers
outside the universities in not only physics and chemistry but also biology and medical research. By World War I, Germany developed what we later conceptualize as
"an institute system'' that beyond the traditional universities was composed of three other sectors, industrial laboratories, institutes of technology, and government
research institutes, all with considerable status and offering certain advantages in research performance over the universities. Competition now had a new dimension: if
the university sector itself had become more rigid and less stirred by institutional competition, intersector competition within a larger research system could stimulate
responses to changing conditions, even in hidebound settings, "to move stodgy colleagues or a stingy government" with the threat of falling behind.38
And some of the most researchminded among the university professors were very much in the forefront of these new developments as they sought the funding and the
institute structures that would enhance the pace of their investigations—and their power and prestige. Particularly promising were the possibilities of wellfunded but
independent research institutes formally initiated outside the universities. The most important instance was the KaiserWilhelmGesellschaft, founded in 1911, which
after World War II became the Max Planck Society for the Advancement of the Sciences.39 The Kaiser Wilhelm Society was a national body, not a creation of one
or more of the states. It was a quasiofficial institution at the outset, funded more by industry than by the Imperial Treasury but understood to be under the protection
of the Kaiser (Wilhelm II). It established and funded its own institutes. Eminent university chemists played a leading role in its organization and leadership: the
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first two research institutes of the society, opened in 1912, were devoted entirely to chemistry, and the first four, in place by the outbreak of war in 1914, involved
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chemistry. The new laboratories proved immediately useful: they were soon integrated into the war effort to do research in weapons and in synthetics that could
replace imported goods cut off by blockade. By 1920, this new sector had grown to twenty institutes.
This development of a nonuniversity research sector found encouragement in the pull and push of quite different academic interests. Then as now, some ambitious
academic scientists saw the regular university research settings as too small, too lacking in financial resources and personnel, and too pure in their pursuit of knowledge
for its own sake. The opening shots of Big Science arguing for research concentration could be heard in calls for "national" laboratories. Growing enrollments in the
universities also meant much more teaching, including presentations to students who lacked interest in the subject matter and were inclined to vacate their seats in the
lecture hall. Even then, such academic work could be depressing; at the least, it would often not compare with the challenge of running a major institute and the
rewards of pursuing new research findings. Then, too, a sizable share of the traditional professoriate—those who were in effect on the other side of the aisle—wanted
to exclude "applied research" from the university and were only too happy to have it placed outside. Finally, particularly with its "chair'' form of local control, the
university operating level that had evolved since the 1820s had in many cases become rigid by the end of the century. Institutes that once were instruments of striking
change had become restraining points of solidified power. Their controlling professors had developed "vested interests in keeping new specialties that arose in their
fields as subspecialties within their own institutes rather than allowing them to become separate chairs with claims for new institutes." 40
New nonuniversity institutes could then be a preferred power solution for all: the innovators pressing new initiatives; the old guard holding onto power and wishing the
innovators would go away; and the state officials mediating between the two types of faculty and seeking ways to get new institutes under way. The nineteenthcentury
German university had not become a flexible enterprise that would err on the side of inclusiveness, similar to the orientation developing in the United States by the turn
of the century, particularly under the public service mentality of the land grant state universities. In Germany, the sharp
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limits placed around professional training (only a few fields were considered legitimate for the university) and the commitment to unfettered pure research together
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spelled a restraining distrust of a technical, applied role for university research. 41
By the turn of the century, government officials, industry leaders, and academics who were mindful of national strength in science and technology also confronted new
international comparisons that worried them. The rapid growth of universities in the United States and the new startling role played by philanthropy in that country led
to warnings of a rising behemoth that could soon overshadow European systems, including Germany, in pure and applied research. Particularly eyecatching after the
turn of the century was the establishment in 19011902 of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research of New York, which concentrated in biomedical fields, and
the Carnegie Institution of Washington, which was ready to award astonishingly large grants to researchers in a wide range of fields. Taking immediate note, the chief
scientist of the British Royal Institution, in his 1902 presidential address to the British Association for the Advancement of Science, computed that "the interest from
Carnegie's endowment for one year exceeded all that had been spent by his institution [university] in the previous hundred." In their turn, German officials and senior
scientists could express shock in the calculation that the combined annual interest from the Rockefeller and Carnegie endowments approximated the total budget of a
large German university, and it was all earmarked for research!42 By 1910, the Prussian Ministry of Education was ready to acknowledge that perhaps the top twelve
American universities were worthy of comparison with the twentyone in the German system. And there was no mistaking the comparative rates of growth. The
American universities now had much larger and more rapidly increasing budgets. While it was true that much of the American money was spent (squandered?) on the
general education of young untutored students, the American universities in a wholesale fashion were also developing graduate programs firmly based on research.
Moreover, the Americans were showing that scientific work could be promoted within both public and private universities and that private contributions from
individuals and foundations could play a significant role.43
In short, between the growing capability of American universities and the resources for research support offered by new private foundations, the American challenge in
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scientific productivity and preeminence had begun. Influence now flowed across the Atlantic in both
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directions. Part of the German response to this challenge was to use "orchestrated philanthropy" to establish alongside the universities the Kaiser Wilhelm framework
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"for the advancement of science." 44 What we later conceptualize in Part Two as the phenomenon of research drift began early in the German system, not as early as
in France as we later see but earlier than in Britain, the United States, and Japan. The seeds of this movement of basic as well as applied research away from university
settings of teaching and learning were sown in part by a form of university that by the end of the nineteenth century had become considerably rigid in its capacity to
share power and restrictive in its willingness to allow emerging fields and ongoing outside fields to have a place at the table. University exclusiveness encouraged the
growth of alternative settings, researchcentered settings that could leave teaching and learning behind.
TwentiethCentury Travail
With Humboldt suitably interpreted and researchcentered units institutionalized as the prized core of the university, the German system of 1900 was without any
doubt the place in the world where a productive researchteachingstudy nexus existed in great profusion. But the system ran aground in the next halfcentury and
thereby helped to substantially transfer preeminence in academic research and related research training to other countries, principally to the United States. World War
I brought staggering losses in manpower, with the virtual physical elimination of an entire generation of young men. The deeply troubled days of the Weimar Republic
(19181933), with its hyperinflation, unemployment, war exhaustion, and deeply divided political life, were no time for a sector dependent on the public purse to
prosper. And then the Fascist period (19331945) became the watershed. On the one side, Germany, however troubled, was still internationally preeminent in
scientific research and university training. On the other, its badly weakened system, physically battered by war, ideologically compromised by Fascist doctrines, and
shorn by emigration of much of its outstanding talent, was now overtaken and surpassed by other national systems. Henry Turner put it aptly: "At the end of the war,
the country's once proud universities and scientific institutes sat idle and discredited after twelve years of collaboration and repression, stripped of much of the talent
that had won them worldwide prominence before 1933." Morally, "the country appeared bankrupt."45
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The exodus of talent to an American system that had begun its own scientific takeoff between the two world wars was important both for the immediate war effort and
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for the long run. The German loss, the American gain, primarily in the sciences but not limited to those disciplines, amounted to a sea change in the international
location of research and scholarly work. 46 Arguably most damaging to Germany was the loss of legitimacy wrought by the years of Fascist domination and
intervention. By the summer of 1945, the surviving cadres of professors were badly scarred by the political struggles of the Weimar and Fascist years. They were
unsure of support by state and national governments whose own character was often in question, and they were mistrusted by many students and outsiders who
thought they had seen too many compromises with an evil state.
But the ideal of the unity of research and study was not lost. The first fifteen years of postwar academic reconstruction (19461960) in the new "West Germany"—the
Federal Republic of Germany—were given over to the task of getting the German universities back on their feet in their earlier form. High on the agenda was the
necessity of decentralizing the "domain of culture," a realm that included education. German federalism reborn assumed a moral character. ''The creation of a
federation of states of the Federal Republic of Germany [in 1949] was a conscious revival of the traditions of the Weimar Constitution and as such a conscious
reaction to the degradation of the centralized state by the National Socialists from 1933 to 1945."47 The control of education was returned to the individual states
(Länder), now to number eleven. (Following the creation of two Germanies in the late 1940s, the German Democratic Republic—East Germany—treaded an
opposite centralizing path under a Sovietstyle structure of control.)48 For higher education in West Germany, the main exception to a Landcentered constitutional
definition was the authority given the national government to promote scientific research. This was of course no small opening, especially in a country where universities
had been built considerably as loosely connected assemblies of research institutes.
The universities had to be rebuilt in all primary dimensions: personnel, buildings, equipment, student body, overall morale, and sense of purpose. During a massive
reconstruction, the universities sought and were largely able to reclaim their historic autonomy. Chairholding professors, the Ordinarien, again became dominant
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figures, largely unchallenged in their own domains, who were able to construct research programs of their own choosing and to select the few students who, after
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completing the first major degree, wished to stay on at the university in junior positions that might lead to an academic career. By the late 1950s, much of the academic
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world of the early 1930s had been restored: "reconstruction after 1945 exhibited a direct return to Weimar conditions." 49 The system had returned to its classic elite
form. The participation rate for firstdegree students remained low, approximately 4 to 5 percent of the age group,50 with the number of people pursuing advanced
degrees always a much smaller proportion, about one to seven compared with the "undergraduate" base. With such limited numbers, facultystudent relations at the
most advanced levels, as in the prewar decades, could be more like those found in small guilds or crafts than in large bureaucracies or professions. Scholarly scientific
work could again center on the senior professor who would assemble "at the bench'' a few subordinate members of the staff and a few wouldbe apprentices.
Thus, as part of the restoration of the university, the old building block of the chairinstitute regained its longstanding primacy. Chair holders were again the only senior
professors in particular fields at the universities and the sole heads of institutes. In turn, the institute continued as "a selfcontained teaching and research unit, containing
all necessary personnel and facilities, such as laboratories, a library, and lecture and seminar rooms."51 These selfcontained units were still called seminars in the
humanities and social sciences and clinics in the medical faculties; "institute" is here used as a generic term that embraces the other forms. The control of an institute
again greatly enhanced the power of the individual professor, against which faculty and universitylevel organs, constituted essentially as occasionally convened
assemblies of barons, were relatively impotent. The institute was still a state establishment and in many critical matters did not answer to the faculty and the university
of which the professor was a part. Instead, as institute director in full charge of budget, facilities, and personnel, the professor was subject only to the authority of the
ministry and continued to have a direct relationship.52 The hybrid instituteuniversity form of organization, with its sharp hierarchy of status and power, continued.
The German institute and the American department have sometimes been viewed as functionally equivalent, serving as the lowest operating units in their respective
systems. But the institute has generally been smaller in scope, usually covering what Americans would call a subfield; it is also more selfcontained, right down to
possession and con
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trol of its own space. When major administrative reform finally came to the German system in the 1970s, departments (Fachbereiche) were created not to replace the
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institutes but to substitute, as a substructure, for the five or six large unwieldy faculties. A larger set of departments—fifteen, twenty, twentyfive—became the second
level of organization; and under the 1976 Framework Law, the departments were given greater authority over the allocation of funds and personnel than the faculties
had had. Even though the departments had been inserted partly to better control the institutes, the institutes still remained intact. 53 Thus the department in Germany is
not the lowest operating unit but rather a larger facultytype assembly of a set of institutes. The institute in the main still deploys courses and examinations and functions
as the unit within which doctoral training takes place. In the late 1980s, "traditional small units headed by full professors are still very much in evidence," although now
somewhat subject to Fachbereiche control and tending to rest "on a more informal basis."54 Even after smaller institutes (and seminars in the humanities) were merged
into larger units in the early 1970s reform, institutes remained "the institutional units for research"55 in a setting where research came first in longestablished practices
and rewards as well as in hallowed doctrine. Just as it was the guiding element in the old unity principle, research remained "the structuring element of the
universities."56
Impact of Mass Higher Education
But the old principle and the institute structure had hardly been restored before massive changes rendered them highly problematic. If the institute was the immovable
object, mass higher education now became the irresistible force. Expansion hit the German university system with enormous force in the 1960s and continued through
the next two decades with little surcease. During that thirtyyear period student numbers expanded no less than fivefold. A total of no more than 250,000 students in
thirtythree universities in 1960 became over 1,300,000 students in sixtyeight universities by 1990. Faculty increased from 17,000 to over 70,000. A major
nonuniversity sector (Fachhochschulen), established and encouraged by the government to handle professional preparation in additional fields of study, grew by 1990
to over 325,000 students in over twenty institutions, onefourth of the university enrollment, with rate of growth running in its favor. What had been a university system
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thereby became a binary system of postsecondary educa
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tion. 57 Other major structural changes were attempted, often to be later discontinued or partly rolled back. For example, an effort in the 1970s to establish
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"comprehensive universities" (Gesamthochschulen) that would combine the more practical tasks of Fachhochschulen and teacher training colleges with the traditional
form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable
tasks of the universities soon encountered considerable resistance, especially by professors in established universities. Rather than sweep the field, this major
innovation became a small enclave of institutions.
Given the magnitude and rapidity of expansion, the creation of a major second sector could not save the universities from extensive massification. Their enrollment
rosters bulged: in the 1980s, the largest universities (e.g., Munich, Berlin, and Hamburg) had an enrollment of up to 50,000 students. German observers noted
concomitant increases in the ratio of students to staff: from 29:1 in 1975 to 38:1 in 1988 in the number of students per "professor"; from 10:1 in 1975 to 15:1 in 1985
in number of students per "academic staff."58 And there was little or no internal university structure to channel the student flow. Now facing greater increased numbers
of junior faculty as well as virtual hordes of students, the chairholding professors who had been restored to power became more remote than ever. Politicization set in
with a vengeance. The great student discontent of the late 1960s and early 1970s that stretched across many nations had a particularly sharp edge in Germany; radical
students and notsoradical junior staff were willing to portray establishment figures as reactionary, even tainted with a history of Fascist sympathy if not Nazi party
involvement. Student and governmental actions during these years of bitter protest led to new formal arrangements of stronger rights and greater privileges for junior
faculty, students, and nonteaching staff. These schemes burned brightly for a few years, led on by the idea that they would usher in a new day of democratic
participation. But by the mid and late 1970s, they were somewhat retrenched by adverse court decisions and new legislation and by the daytoday realities of
power, in which rank, seniority, expertise, and fundraising capacity determine that some academics will have considerably more influence than others. Chairs did not
disappear; neither did research institutes directed by key professors.
By the mid1980s, in this German age of expansion, some 20 percent of the age group, having achieved the Abitur or other qualifying school degrees, were in higher
education, with about 14 percent in universities and 6 percent attending Fachhochschulen.59 In this setting of greatly expanded enrollment, the wild card has been the
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longstanding tradi
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tion of maximum student choice. For the most part, other than in the case of entry controls (numerus clausus) established for medicine and a few other fields, students
form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable
have continued to be free to choose both the institution they will attend and the field of study in which they will specialize. As a result, individual universities have had
little control over their total size or the size and balance of their departments. Having selected their university and subject, entering students embark on long programs
of study that in the 1980s were taking five to seven years to complete. With some military service (for men) along the way, graduation often does not occur until about
twentyeight, 60 an advanced age for firstdegree attainment; in Britain, students who go straight on can take the threeyear bachelor's degree by the age of twenty
two or twentythree, and in the United States, students can also complete the fouryear undergraduate program at a relatively young age. In both Britain and the
United States, entry to "graduate" programs can take place by the midtwenties.
The German first tier of instruction and degree completion emphasizes specialization and professional qualification in all fields. Essentially no distinction is made
between "academic" and "professional" offerings; that is, basic disciplines and professional schools are not linguistically and structurally distinguished as they are in the
United States.61 And all students are considered advanced. Toward the end of their firstdegree work, they typically prepare a thesis, a bit of concentrated work that
may be compared to master'slevel work in the American system, which students can use to take a diploma or a degree. Two types of completion are essentially
academic: the Diplom and the Magister Artium (M.A.), taken in the mid1980s by 41 and 4 percent of the students, respectively. A third type, Staatsexamen, is a
more professional (in American terminology) degree, administered predominantly in medicine, law, and teacher training, jointly supervised by academic staff and public
examination officials, and awarded by the state, not the university.62 Over onehalf of the students complete in this fashion, producing a close connection between
many firsttier programs and state certification that adds to the rigidity of the existing structure: change in certain university courses of study requires changes in the
rules and regulations of the civil service and hence the concurrence of government officials.
Behind the centrality of the prolonged first tier of university study lies the basic condition that most university students have passed
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through the Gymnasium, the classic universitypreparatory secondary school, where, on graduating with the Abitur at the age of eighteen or nineteen, they are defined
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by one and all as broadly educated young adults who now have the "maturity" to study at institutions of higher learning. 63 They are not, as in America, culturally
defined as "kids" still in need of a general or liberal education to deepen the mind and gentle the soul. Rather, having been exposed to generalized knowledge and
having attained "maturity," students entering the university historically have been considered ready for specialized learning. From the first year on they can concentrate
on a specialty, vocational or academic. They specialize in medicine by entering a selfcontained faculty of medicine, or in law in another equally bounded unit, or
embark on a disciplinary specialty. With course work stretching over five or more years, leading directly to professional qualification and possibly even a master's
degree, a second major tier of operations similar to the American graduate school hardly seemed necessary. Hence the German system has not until recently
attempted to distinguish between "undergraduate" and "graduate'' education, or to position "professional schools" at a postfirstdegree level. Notably, German
universities have historically not developed sequences of courses for advanced work in the basic disciplines that would constitute a de facto advanced curriculum.
Within an essentially singletier structure, the most advanced level of education and training is constituted by a combination of the upper years of the firstdegree work
and noncurricular arrangements beyond the first six years. For most students the first tier has become operationally divided into an initial two to threeyear segment
largely given over to lectures organized to present introductory and intermediate materials and a second two to threeyear component of seminars and lectures in
which students ostensibly edge closer to the traditional "quest for truth," particularly as they prepare for and then write a thesis.64 Beyond this point, those students—
one in seven at the end of the 1980s—who wish to pursue a doctoral degree do not enroll in a department to take advanced courses or even register with the
university.65 Instead they need to find paid employment, if possible, in the form of a teaching position or a research post, the latter either inside the university or in an
outside research institute. Thus "doctoral students" cultivate not a graduate student role but a junior occupational niche that directly involves them in research or that at
least supports them while
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they independently do the research or scholarly writing that can lead to a doctoral dissertation. But posts for these research staff, or "graduate staff," are in short
Copyright © 1995. University of California Press. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without
supply. 66
The structure of doctoral training as of the end of the 1980s has been crisply summarized by HansJürgen Block.
permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law.
Doctoral studies are not well structured in German universities. Doctoral students (Doktoranden) have to be accepted by a personal supervisor who ought to be a professor. They
pursue research work. Most [of them] are employed by the university. They hold university posts (teaching or research assistant, often in parttime positions) or they are funded
by research contracts awarded to their supervisors. In addition there is a grant system. . . . The doctoral degree requires 35 years of research work. . . . The necessary course work
to pass the doctoral examination is negligible.67
Or, as summarized by Ludwig Huber, "German universities, with few exceptions to date [1986], do not offer doctoral programmes incorporating a minimum
systematic institutional effort to qualify candidates further. It is entirely a matter of the individual master/apprentice relation between the candidate and 'his' supervisor
whether he gets training and advice in his work and, if so, how much."68 Hence, beyond the upper years of the first tier, there lies mainly a nonformal segment of
activity in which direct research work or independent study provides the main vehicle of student involvement, while courses and seminars have little or no role. For
many candidates in the humanities and the social sciences, the minimization of structure means that wouldbe advanced scholars work largely on their own at home,
with only nominal contact with the professor(s) to whom a dissertation might some day be submitted.
German academics may still hope and intend to have the upper years of the firstdegree work serve as a place for inquiry, but mass higher education has imposed
another story.
The conditions are anything but intimate. Lectures with several hundred students are no exception, and seminars often contain one hundred or more. The amount of written work
is minimal, and the habit of not attending lectures or seminars at all is widespread. Thus the tacit institutional control and supervision which is a structural given in many other
systems hardly exists in Germany.69
In this setting, the old seminar functions more like popular upper division courses in bachelor degree programs in American universities, where professors concentrate
on specialized topics and may draw considerably on their own research. Claudius Gellert found in the late
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1980s that only a few students in firstdegree programs, less than 10 percent, had a close relationship with a professor by means of laboratory or seminar
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participation, following the pattern idealized when a much smaller number of students sought research training and disciplinary knowledge was considerably simpler.
Now, "the average student at German universities is not involved in research." 70
Among responses to the great change in student life wrought by mass higher education and expanded knowledge, disciplinary differences increasingly loom large. The
sciences exhibit relatively strong conditions of student involvement and capacity to adjust in contrast to the humanities and "soft" social sciences. For example, physics
and history offer sharply different settings. In the former there is much external funding, while in the latter there is very little. Physics is also strongly involved in the
institute system that lies outside the universities, while history has only a token appearance. Research posts are relatively numerous for those pursuing advanced training
in physics but not for those in history. Extensively in physics, and increasingly throughout the sciences, research candidates take up assigned places in research teams
and projects, while in history they generally work on their own and often at a distance from academic staff and peers. Thus, while conditions have become more
difficult in general for those pursuing advanced training within and beyond the firsttier programs, a much stronger support structure is available in the sciences than in
the humanities; for the most part, the social sciences are positioned in between.71 In a university system so much based on institutes as prime units, it is even more the
case that the more scientific the field, the more likely it is that research training in one form or another will receive support. It is also more likely that linkage will be
made between the research of the professor and that of trainees: "whether the master apprentice model is effective seems simply to depend upon whether there exists
a 'workshop' where others meet regularly and work, too, in which the 'apprentice' may become fully and daily integrated. For this, organized research like that in
engineering and the natural sciences with its bigger projects and research groups is apparently a necessary, though insufficient condition."72
Aided by their greater overall support and their greater affinity for an institute framework, the physical and biological sciences are also better positioned to fashion
informal and quasiformal pathways for bringing able research students forward, involving them in research, and even offering some supervisory attention to their
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progress in research train
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ing. This includes taking some of them into "outside" institutes in which the professors themselves are centrally involved.
form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable
At the Max Planck institutes a number of advanced students are also engaged in research as part of their diploma thesis [which may take a year, serving as a minidoctoral
dissertation] or as doctoral students [holding two to threeyear parttime paid positions]. . . . [O]ne of the professors at an institute, who usually share their time with positions at
a university, takes responsibility for the overall supervision of diploma candidates as well as for doctoral students. As a physics professor in an institute near Munich pointed out,
he and his colleagues had very positive experiences with diploma candidates, since most of them were highly motivated and could be intensively supervised at the institute. Each
member of the institute supervises on the average between one and two diploma theses. The results, even on the diploma level, are sometimes published in international journals.
73
Thus advanced students, before or after taking the first degree, may find a place in researchperforming and researchtraining niches in outside institutes as well as in
ones within the universities. Professors who are themselves based in the two locales of institute and university provide the bridge. Selection is relatively informal and
even highly personal. And the vast majority of firstdegree students, under modern conditions, cannot get close to the bridge, let alone cross it.
Diversification of an Institute System
Built over a long period of time but with noticeable acceleration in recent decades, the German research system is quite diverse in its possession of nonuniversity
instruments. At the end of the nineteenth century, as earlier noted, certain kinds of research began to ease out of traditional universities into other types of research
organizations, notably the Kaiser Wilhelm institutes, which were financed by industry and state. This research domain was reconstituted and strengthened in 1948 as
the Max Planck Society, a body largely financed by national government to establish and fund its own institutes. The society's institutes, numbering about sixty in the
late 1980s, play a central role in German science. Relatively well funded, they are committed to basic research and have a reputation for high quality. Their researchers
are mostly fulltime, as compared to university teacherresearchers who can only devote part of their time to research, a part that diminishes as teaching burdens
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increase.74 The institutes represent a significant diversification of the German research system.
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Such diversification has been furthered since the 1950s by the extension of the idea of statesupported "independent" research institutes to applied research, notably in
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the form of the Fraunhofer Society, a growing set of industrylinked institutes that numbered over thirtyfive by the end of the 1980s. Other distinctive research sectors
have developed at a rapid rate: a set of Big Science institutes (thirteen by the close of the 1980s) funded by national government, chiefly for nuclear research; a varied
array of smaller institutes, numbering over three hundred, that were supported by either national or state ministries or both. These proliferating mostly government
supported sectors exist alongside the major R&D investment German industry has made in the form of thousands of industrial laboratories and institutes that, in the late
1980s, employed as many as 90,000 researchers. 75
The universities are thereby just one part of a statesupported research system in which other sectors offer greater concentration of attention on research on the part of
researchers as well as greater concentration of resources and personnel on particular disciplines and specialties. The universities are far from having a monopoly of
basic research, let alone applied research; they have to watch carefully their share of resources and personnel and the comparative attractiveness of their research
conditions. In overall R&D expenditures, where the "development" component weighs heavily in costs, industry has the dominant role, both in putting up the money
and spending it. In state expenditures alone, the universities have about onehalf the pie, with the other half distributed among the many nonuniversity sectors. As a
result, the research system is unusually dense, especially when seen in the context of a nation whose population (61 million in the late 1980s) was in the range of
France and Britain (55 million and 56 million, respectively) and only onehalf that of Japan (120 million) and onefourth that of the United States (240 million). Density
of research establishments is also heightened by the relatively small geographic size of West Germany, which is roughly equal to the state of Oregon and has a
population density ten times that of the United States.
Adding to complexity in the distribution of the research function is the way the German federal structure of government operates in university and research funding.
Similar to the United States, but notably different from Britain and France, substantial support issues from the state level, that is, from the eleven Länder—Baden
Württemberg, Bavaria, Berlin, Bremen, Hamburg, Hesse, Lower Saxony, North RhineWestphalia, RhinelandPalatinate, Saarland, and SchleswigHolstein. The
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states provide the main line, the "institutional line," of university support, including faculty salaries, similar to the pattern found in state universities in the United States.
form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable
At the same time, the national government has become the primary player in providing an additional "research line" of support, offering the second half of what is
commonly known in European countries as the dualsupport system. Both state and national governments participate in capital grants, funding the construction of
buildings and the availability of equipment. In comparison to a singlegovernment framework, this statefederal duality adds variation, first by inserting statebystate
differences in culture and government, for example, northern liberal Hamburg in comparison to southern conservative Bavaria, and then by placing the institutional and
research lines under different levels of government, where they are then subject to different interests and biases.
The interplay among funding sources, money streams, and research outlets in Germany has become ever more complicated as the higher education system has grown
greatly in population size and many times more elaborate in knowledge specialties and operating units. Heavily affecting research and advanced research training in the
university sector is the tendency for general institutional support funds distributed by the states to flow toward mass instruction at beginning and intermediate levels.
With so many more students, "the financial support from the Länder has been diverted from research to education" 76—or more precisely, from research activity and
researchbased training to instruction that is not blended with research but instead presents codified knowledge. This tendency puts strong pressure on academic
researchers to increase the funds they obtain from the national government and other external sources through the research line. But these funds are always limited,
particularly when onehalf already go outside the university and the longterm flow seems adverse to the universities. The competitive struggle among university
research groups and between them and the other research performers is then increased. University institutes, in particular, have become more dependent on national
bodies, preeminently the national German Research Society (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, or DFG), a key national group set up in 1951 as an amalgamation of
former researchfunding bodies.77 A few private foundations, notably the Volkswagen Foundation, have emerged since 1960 as supporters of research, traditionally a
state function. Whether public or private, the research line distributes funds unevenly rather than by bureaucratic formula and standardized allocations. As research
grants
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are awarded competitively by means of peer review and staff decision in national bodies, there is a lengthening continuum of supported and nonsupported research
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groups, successful and unsuccessful applicants, in varying degree: big winners and small winners shade off into small losers and big losers.
The plurality of strong nonuniversity sectors in the overall German research system has at least three major implications for research and research training in the
universities. First, the existence and prowess of these alternative sites opens the door for much outward research drift; research can clearly find other homes, even
more attractive ones. Second, competition for research funds and for research personnel is intensified, serving simultaneously as a drain on the universities and a spur
to their research efforts. Third, formal advanced training in the universities is more than ever seen as a secondary activity, even a quite minor and perhaps not
necessary one, compared to the actual doing of research that is so immediately attractive. If the many research institutes individually and collectively seem to get the
job done, then perhaps advanced university training is not a problem after all—a view easy to adopt in an outside institute eager to get on with its research and able to
acquire the young supportive personnel it needs over the bridges it has built to the universities. Then, too, much research training can take place on the job, as it
always must to some degree; so, arguably, it can all be done here with "us" rather than over there in the large impersonal university swamped with students and first
degree teaching.
However, the "overloading" of firstdegree programs in both student numbers and years of study had come together by the 1980s with an evident understructuring of
doctoral studies to produce widespread concern that would not diminish, no matter how successful the overall research system. Why not shorten and simplify first
degree programs, limiting their upward reach, while putting more structured and more concentrated "graduate" researchbased programs in place? By 1986,
Germany's leading national scientific body, the Wissenschaftrat, was ready to argue publicly that "the concept of 'unity of research and teaching,' a traditional claim of
the German university, has now to be dropped from undergraduate education and reserved for postgraduate work alone.'' 78 The most able doctoral candidates
should attend Graduiertenkollegs (graduate colleges), which might be established in particular fields at particular universities, thereby simultaneously serving
selectivity, concentration, differentiation, and competition.79 As of 1990, after a few years of experimentation, about seventy organized
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graduate courses were under way, approved and funded on a competitive basis by a national research association. But all was tentative and against the longstanding
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mold. "The courses are not meant to substitute [for] the traditional paths of gaining a doctoral degree through parttime teaching and research positions at the university
or through scholarships. Rather, they are meant to supplement these forms." 80 The old combination of belief and interest in which close linkage of research, teaching,
and learning is taken to apply to all academic staff and students, in all fields at all universities, still exhibits a powerful hold on academic thought.
Then, in 1990, all debate and reform on the issue of graduate education had to stand aside, overshadowed by the huge problems of integrating two systems of higher
education and two systems of research organization that stemmed from the unification of the Federal Republic of Germany and the German Democratic Republic. The
future direction of structural reform that would institutionally relocate, focus, and concentrate the unity principle might be clear, but it would have to wait on solution of
unification problems as well as on greater recognition by the professoriate that the gap between idea and reality was growing steadily wider.
The Institute University: A Summation
The Humboldtian formulation of 1810 is without doubt the most influential academic ideology of the last two centuries. Truly liberating, this doctrine opened an
extremely broad conceptual space that stretched from inquiry as a basis for teaching and learning to idealist formulations of broad selfdevelopment and general
enlightenment. Academics who wanted to concentrate on research and thereby have it serve as the foundation of university life found elements in the doctrine that were
congenial to their emerging interests: for them, Humboldtian thought became foremost a research ethic comfortable with scientific specialization. Their new interests set
the tracks; the Humboldtian idea, specified in a helpful form, rationalized a move into disciplinary science.81
The new disciplinarians who seized this conceptual opening gradually developed supportive tools in the form of seminars, laboratories, and institutes that could
operationally integrate research, teaching, and study. Not created to meet increased student demand or to answer cries for more and better people for the civil service
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and the outside labor force, these instruments served a growing interest in creating knowl
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edge and teaching new specialized bodies of theory and method. During the second half of the nineteenth century, these forms became deeply institutionalized in the
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German university, especially in the omnibus philosophical faculties that formally housed the basic disciplines. Institutetype settings became academic locations that set
researchintentioned students apart from those pursuing degrees to enter the civil service and the professions and from those who sought the dueling scar as the mark
left by university life. Critically, these new tools became tied to the immense local power of the men who possessed university chairs and simultaneously served as
directors of institutes. These chairdirectors developed a direct relationship to funding government officials that generally bypassed both university and faculty levels of
organization.
However, the chairinstitute organizational form was subject to hardening of the arteries. By the period 19001920, the German system experienced the rigidities and
sheer arbitrariness that flow in time from baronial powers, leading to problems of control and change that would surface in a major way in the last half of the twentieth
century. But within that local structure, a fundamental process was established: the "research university" that was to flower internationally in the twentieth century
learned in nineteenthcentury Germany to differentiate programs and methods of teacherstudent interaction in such a way that small enclaves could pursue research
based teaching and study while large instruments for transmitting established knowledge, especially the lecture hall and the professional curriculum, processed the much
larger number of students who primarily sought practical training or university social life.
By the early twentieth century, other modern features of academic differentiation had also been born. A second sector composed of technological schools and more
applied universities became a significant element, thereby giving engineering, for example, an academic home even if legal, medical, and philosophical faculties wanted
little, if anything, to do with it. Especially important were the beginnings of a nonprofit research sector separate from the university, supported by industry and
government, a development spurred in part by academic scientists who wanted concentrations of attention, resources, and talent for research purposes beyond what
the individual universities could seemingly offer and who were impatient with the "diversion" of time to teaching and other university duties. Fulltime research settings
that might well leave teaching and learning aside were already proving attractive to some
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university scientists who wanted to maximize the pursuit of research productivity.
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Fully mature by 1900, this historic system experienced enormous turbulence throughout the first half of the twentieth century which led not to significant adaptive
change but first to coping with continuing disasters and then to effecting a return to the status quo ante. After 1945, virtually heroic action was needed simply to return
German higher education to what it had been several decades earlier. In moving away from Fascist controls and practices, old ideas of freedom of research and
freedom of teaching were given new meaning, deemed so important that they were written into the new constitution, the Basic Law of 1949, in the form of an article
that simply read, "Art and science, research and teaching, are free." 82 As the autonomy of universities was vigorously stressed anew, primary emphasis was placed on
individual scholars who, as researchers, should be free to choose research subjects, methods of investigation, and modes of dissemination of results and, as teachers,
should be completely free in what and how they taught. To bring universities back to what they had been before the Fascist regime meant to stress again the operative
tools crafted in the nineteenth century. The institute retained its primacy as the atom and molecule of German university organization—the place for inquiry and the
place for linking research to teaching. Following the formula "one chairone institute," the institute continued to be the means by which to organize research, base
teaching on research, and involve students in research.
After 1960, the system entered an entirely new phase of development in which student expansion and knowledge expansion interacted to produce a furious pace of
change. The old instruments of institute, laboratory, and seminar were placed in the context of the "mass university," with its overwhelming loads of introductory and
intermediate teaching and its deepening requirements for systematized instruction and standardized pathways of study. In need of still more protective enclaves for the
researchteachingstudy nexus, professors devised largely informal ways deep within the formal system to separate and bring together researchminded students. As
more research moved outside the university, more professors also entered into a bridging role that spanned the formal gap between university and external institute.
Only a small minority of students were then chosen to cross that bridge, to become deeply involved in research—another vehicle for the natural elitism of "best
science." In the linking of research to teaching and
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study, context and content have moved far in Germany by the 1980s from both the original Humboldtian formulation and its nineteenthcentury expression in practice.
form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable
In the mass university, research activity needs the aid of much institutional differentiation. On this score the contemporary German problem runs deep. While the
system has changed from elite to mass in student numbers and has become much more complex in scale of operations, its structure remained relatively undifferentiated
among and within universities. Across a set of universities that number nearly seventy in 1990, little differentiation has been formally introduced or informally evolved.
Hence neither resources nor personnel nor research work itself could be readily concentrated. Much applauded as a means of maintaining formal institutional equity,
such nondifferentiation inflates costs: any greatly expanded system that formally treats all academic staff as if they are equally involved in research will become a high
cost system. Costs are then contained by increasing studentteacher ratios and otherwise reducing per capita support across the board. Also, as teaching occupies
more time, research capacity is diminished. Further, lack of university control over student access severely retards differentation: when students are deemed fully
qualified on exit from the secondary system and then left free to choose both their institutions and their fields of study, the universities "are subjected to a continuous
levelingout process." 83 When the equalization effect is so strong, universities are weakly positioned to develop their own configurations of strength, their own
integrative identity.
Within the universities, as we have seen, study beyond the first major degree has had little formal definition and support, even as the function of research training tends
to be pushed up and out from the first level. The differentation of a true doctoral level is increasingly, if reluctantly, seen as a step that will have to come about one way
or another. If not, the temptation to let research move out of the universities to alternative sites becomes stronger. Officials and academics come to believe that better
results can be gained by investing more in outside concentrations of equipment and personnel.
At the end of the twentieth century, the German system has become subjected to a vicious circle of effects. The incantation of Humboldtian doctrine across the system
as a uniform principle for all serves as a serious obstacle to the development of a limited set of institutions where research and study could be productively integrated at
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an advanced level. Viewed from the perspective of the American system, where an
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elaborately developed graduate level is the key element in the sciencehigher education relationship, the contemporary lack in the German system of a strong graduate
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tier is a major stumbling block. At the same time, the commitment to research is widely and powerfully institutionalized in a plethora of major organizational
instruments—many nonprofit institutes, state and national institutes, and industrial laboratories as well as the universities. Whatever the structural deficiencies in the
universities, the willingness and capacity to fund and enable scientific research has remained worldclass.
The deep and persistent problem in the German system is whether strong research settings can be and will be maintained in key locales in the universities, institutions
where advanced teaching and study take place across the increasingly farflung and varied array of fields that make up the physical sciences, biological and medical
sciences, social sciences, humanities, and many professional fields. Experiments with "graduate colleges" under way in the early 1990s exemplify the search for new
organizational and curricular patterns that could reverse what we can call the retreat of the research enclaves in the universities. New forms are sought that could
systematically offer thousands of microsettings that can closely link research, teaching, and study.
In their monumental work on the development of physics in nineteenth and early twentiethcentury Germany, Christa Jungnickel and Russell McCormmach noted that
three things are presently needed for a university discipline: research by established scientists; advanced training for students by means of involvement in research; and
a comprehensive course of study. 84 Bringing these three elements into alignment in modern universities is not easy: imbalances in emphasis result when historically
determined settings push one element to the fore. The German setting has put much weight on the research activity of established staff. In the numerous nonuniversity
sectors, with the Max Planck institutes as foremost examples, staff research is at the forefront. Student research is a subsidiary activity; a comprehensive course of
study is not even a part of the agenda. In the universities, staff research again comes first, with student research somewhat emphasized but increasingly limited by the
diversion of staff time and resources to "mass studies." Critically, the element of "a comprehensive course of study" is in short supply. Traditional patterns have long
given short shrift to organized courses of study, for all students and especially for doctoral students. A historically "thin" curricular structure has been made even thinner
by the student expansion and knowledge expansion of recent
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decades. Advanced study, in a phrase, is curriculumpoor. In the interrelating of research, teaching, and study, the basic weakness of an "institute university" is that it
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leaves the study component relatively unsystematized.
An observed in Germany, mass higher education and expanded disciplinary knowledge together tend to overwhelm the old tools of smallgroup interaction based on
research when those instruments remain lodged within firstdegree programs. As the organizational ground shifts, efforts to maintain appropriate settings seemingly
have but three lines of change to pursue: to set aside special enclaves within the firstdegree realm to which only a few students have access; to fashion intersector
bridges that link university programs to outside institutes; and, finally, to move the integration of research, teaching, and study to a higher university tier, there to devise
a teaching program and a curriculum that fuse with research activity. The latter direction of change is perhaps the one that is the most difficult to bring about. It is also
the most essential.
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